Hastings gull
Well-known member
- Nov 23, 2013
- 4,654
My 12 year-old dog had a persistent and smelly ear infection which we treated with antibiotics. Anyway, it came back so our vets suggested she needed an MRI and, in all probability, her entire ear canal removing, leaving her dear in one ear. Cost? About £4k. Insurance company not interested and nor was I, given she's quite old. Been cleaning her ear daily with saline and tea trea oil and it's cleared up a treat. Utter scam.
We do the same. Our lab is 2 and so the chances of her needing a huge vet bill is slim -yes, I know! We put aside £40.00 per month and it is now over £1500.00, which will cover most things. If the bill exceeds this, then we pay it as we love our pets, but doing it this way is a gamble, albeit with a younger dog, it is on balance a reasonable risk. I don't trust insurance companies to stick to their side of the bargain, after a friend was refused payment, and this has so far worked well for us.I've mentioned on here before (when we last discussed this subject), that that's what we do. Having been caught out when our first dog was quite young (about 20 years ago) we cancelled the insurance and ever since then we've put the insurance premiums into a specific savings account. That's covered ALL our vet and medical bills over the years for all our animals, plus it's paid for little extras. This account currently has a huge surplus, so we are definitely ahead. (And membership of the Dogs' Trust gives us 3rd party cover in case they cause an accident).
It isn't for everyone, I think I mentioned last time that we were boasting about this to some friends and they decided to copy us. They cancelled the insurance for their cat .... and then a month or so later they got stung for a huge vet bill before they'd had time to build up a reasonable pot! I tried to console them by saying the insurance probably didn't cover it anyway, but I don't think they were convinced!